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Hedgerow

Hedgerows are one of our most easily encountered wildlife habitats, found lining roads, railways and footpaths, bordering fields and gardens and on the coast.

What is it?

Hedges are strips of woodland edge habitat. Coming in many shapes and sizes, hedges range from narrow strings of closely trimmed scraggy hawthorn bushes sparse in wildlife, to thick bushes, tangled with dog rose, bramble and honeysuckle and overtopped with mature trees. Often the only link between other isolated patches of wildlife habitat scattered across the landscape, thick, flora-rich hedges provide valuable nesting and foraging opportunities for a huge range of wildlife.

The best hedges for wildlife are thick and broadest at the bottom with a range of woody species such as hawthorn, blackthorn, field maple, hazel, spindle, wayfaring tree and wild service tree occasionally overtopped by oak, ash and other standards (sometimes pollarded). Ramblers such as bramble and rose are frequent, together with climbing honeysuckle and wild clematis. At the foot of the hedge, thick herbaceous vegetation commonly includes species such as cow parsley and hedge mustard with coarse grasses, although sometimes woodland flora is found with bluebells and greater stitchwort.

Hedges provide song posts, shelter and nesting opportunities for both woodland and farmland birds such as yellowhammer, whitethroat, blue tit and great tit, while nectar, berries, nuts and leaves provide food for an assortment of invertebrates, mammals and birds. In addition to providing excellent wildlife habitat, hedges can help reduce soil erosion and water run-off on arable land.

Why is it like this?

Hedgerows were generally planted to show ownership boundaries, provide shelter for livestock, while also being stock-proof barriers between fields. Some have older origins and may be the remnants of ancient woodland carved out for farmland.

Many hedges are medieval in origin, and are often curved at the end to leave room for a team of oxen to turn a plough, but miles of hedgerow were planted on common land during the enclosures of the 18th and 19th centuries to exclude the people previously using the land for communal open field farming (for example, 200,000 miles were planted in the English Midlands). It is these more recent hedges that tend to be straight and dominated by hawthorn. The presence of poor colonisers such as field maple, hazel, dogwood and spindle often indicate older hedges (or ones more recently planted by someone with an interest in nature!).

Traditionally, hedges are laid carefully. The stems are partially cut through low down, and the trunks bent over sideways and contained by stakes, creating a thick base to the hedge and filling any gaps. There are a variety of regional styles of hedgelaying, and a national hedgelaying championship is still run each year. Hedges may also top earth banks or stone walls.

What to look for

Look for interesting shrubs such as wild service tree, spindle and guelder rose. Thick well-structured hedges support a variety of farmland and garden birds, and honeysuckle, thorn and bramble blossom and ivy flowers attract a wide range of insects (and are particularly important at the beginning and end of the season). Look out for bumblebees, which also use hedgerows as navigation aids, as do bats such as greater horseshoe bats. In the tussocky vegetation at the foot of hedgerows, look for beetles, including stag beetles.

The caterpillars of the rare brown hairstreak are largely dependent on hedgerow blackthorn in the south – look for white eggs on young blackthorn shoots in winter, and in late summer for clusters of adults around prominent ash trees. Hedgerows are also an important habitat for the hazel dormouse – search for gnawed hazelnut shells and summer nests of woven honeysuckle bark.

Conservation

Tens of thousands of hedgerows were removed from the mid-20th century onwards as a result of grants aimed at increasing agricultural efficiency. Many remaining hedges have been savagely trimmed, neglected or affected by drifting agricultural chemicals ('spray drift'). The best way to manage hedges for wildlife is to lay them – left unmanaged they turn into lines of trees, while hard annual trimming results in thin, gappy hedges that support little but the occasional dunnock or whitethroat. Hedgelaying is best carried out in late winter, before the nesting season and when most berries have been eaten. However, it is a time-consuming activity. Sensitive harvesting of hedges for biofuel may prove one way to ensure they continue to be valued.